Voodoo in William Gibson's Neuromancer
Trilogy
Beauvoir, trying to explain voodoo to Bobby Newmark,
tells him that he doesn't have to worry
whether it's a religion or not. It's just a structure. Lets
you an' me discuss some things that are happening, otherwise we might
not have words for it. . . . You think religion, what are you thinking
about, exactly'?
"Well, my mother's sister, she's a Scientologist, real orthodox. you
know'? And there's this woman across the hall, she's Catholis. My old
lady . . . she'd put the se holograms up in my room sometimes, Jesus
or Hubbard or some shit. I guess I think about that."
"Voodoo isn't like that," Beauvoir said. "It isn't concerned with
notions of salvation and transcendence. What it's about is getting things
done. You follow me? In our system, there are many gods, spirits.
Part of one big family, with all the virtues, all the vices. . . . Voodoo
says there's God, sure, Gran Met, but he's big, too big, and too far
away to worry himself if your ass is poor, or you can't get laid. .
. . Voodoo's like the street. Some duster chops out your syster, so
you ddon't casmp out on the Yakuza's doorstep, do you? No way. You go
to somebody who can get the thing done. Right? [CZ 76-77]
Voodoo and Cyberspace
Bobby took a deep breath. "Lucas said that Jackie's a horse for a snake.
Can you run that by me in street tech?"
"Certainly. Think of Jackie as a deck, Bobby, a cyberspace deck, a very
pretty one with nice ankles." Lucas grinned and Bobby blushed. "Think
of Danbala, who some people call the snake, as a program. Say as an ieebreaker.
Danbala slots into the Jaekie's deek, Jackie cuts ice. That's all."
"Okay," Bobby said, getting the hang of it, "then what's the matrix?
If she's a deck, and Danbala's a program, what's cyberspace?"
"The world," Lucas said.